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Ecological effects of a supra-seasonal drought on macroinvertebrate communities differ between near-perennial and ephemeral river reaches
journal contribution
posted on 2019-09-04, 13:58 authored by MJ Hill, KL Mathers, S Little, T Worrall, J Gunn, Paul WoodPaul WoodThe duration, intensity and frequency of hydrological droughts are predicted to increase significantly over the 21st century globally, threatening the long-term stability of lotic communities. In this paper we examine the recovery and recolonization of macroinvertebrate taxa in ephemeral and near perennial reaches of the River Lathkill (UK) after a supra-seasonal drought event. Following flow resumption, species accumulation (recolonization) occurred rapidly over a 4-month period, with a steady increase observed thereafter. Taxonomic richness was significantly higher in the section with near perennial flow after the first month of the study than the naturally ephemeral reach. Serial correlation was observed in the near perennial section but not in the upstream ephemeral reach. Serial correlation in the near perennial section may reflect: (1) the ongoing process of recovery or (2) the macroinvertebrate community following a new ecological trajectory. Our results suggest that supra-seasonal droughts may cause initial reductions in lotic diversity during stream desiccation events but may re-set ecological succession and/or temporarily provide new ecological niches, thereby supporting increased taxonomic diversity when the full range of hydrological conditions are considered. Quantifying the recovery of ecological communities following supra-seasonal drought can provide information to help develop ecologically effective conservation and management strategies.
Funding
Natural England
History
School
- Social Sciences
Department
- Geography and Environment
Published in
Aquatic SciencesVolume
81Publisher
SpringerVersion
- AM (Accepted Manuscript)
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© Springer Nature Switzerland AGPublisher statement
This is a post-peer-review, pre-copyedit version of an article published in Aquatic Sciences. The final authenticated version is available online at: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00027-019-0659-7.Acceptance date
2019-07-24Publication date
2019-07-27Copyright date
2019ISSN
1015-1621eISSN
1420-9055Language
- en
Depositor
Prof Paul WoodArticle number
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